Pendragon. Catherine Coulter

“How do you do,” Meggie said in another’s voice as the real Meggie lay there beneath Eleanor’s hooves, mortally wounded. Both parts of her wished the heavens would burst open, right this instant, and every fat cloud would dump every ounce of rain until she drowned in it. No, until that damnable young lady named Charlotte drowned in it.

“I am very fine, thank you, Miss Sherbrooke,” said the young lady. She grinned toward Jeremy and lightly tapped her riding crop to his sleeve. “I have told Jeremy that he comes from such a distinguished family. His uncle Douglas is known by simply everyone, you know. I believe your father is the vicar who is also Baron Barthwick of Kildrummy, is that right, Miss Sherbrooke?”

“Yes,” Meggie said, and hated Charlotte Beresford all the way to the soles of her lovely pale gray boots, that perfectly matched her riding gown and that damned artful little hat she wore.

“I have been told that your other uncle, Mr. Ryder Sherbrooke, Jeremy’s brother-in-law, has even taken a seat in the House of Commons. So quaint for a younger son, don’t you think?”

“Not quaint at all,” Meggie said. Jeremy, who was looking a bit puzzled, hastened to say in the abrupt silence, “My brother-in-law hates to see children abused. He works tirelessly to abolish child labor.” Charlotte said, “I am eager to meet him. You and I haven’t spoken of it, but I must say that I feel the same way. It makes one want to weep to think of the poor little ones forced to work at looms for untold hours on end.” She nodded to Jeremy but continued to Meggie, “Jeremy is taking me to Chadwyck House next week to meet his sister and his brother-in-law. And also to Brandon House to meet all the Beloved Ones.”

Meggie wished Charlotte would shut her lovely pink-lipped mouth, particularly since everything that had emerged was filled with kindness and charm. Damn the woman. She was Jeremy’s betrothed.

“Meggie,” Jeremy said now, pulling his gelding in beside Eleanor and motioning Charlotte to pull into the other side of her, “Shall we ride now? You and I can talk about your wild and fractious childhood tonight.” He paused, patted her hand. “I wanted you so much to meet Charlotte.”

“How very thoughtful of you, Jeremy,” Meggie said, that distant Meggie, not the Meggie who lay in pieces on the ground. When it began to rain a few minutes later, she didn’t even blink, just smiled at Jeremy, at Charlotte, and said, “It is too inclement to ride. Goodbye.”

“Until this evening,” Jeremy called after her. She didn’t look back. Her beautiful new riding habit was wet, her riding hat quite ruined, when she finally walked into the Sherbrooke town house. Darby took one look at her and shouted, “My lady!”

When Alex came out of the library to see Meggie standing there, dripping on the beautiful marble entrance hall, she knew something very bad had happened. Not being a dolt, she knew it had to do with Jeremy Stanton-Greville.

Meggie didn’t want to see either Jeremy or Charlotte again, actually, for the rest of her life. No, just Charlotte.

She’d loved him for so long. It didn’t matter that she hadn’t particularly thought about him for years at a time, all the feelings she’d birthed for him so long ago, had just remained dormant, waiting for her to grow up, waiting to burst into bloom when she was ready to take a husband. And there he’d been. As if Fate had plunked him right down in front of her.

Only he hadn’t waited for her.

At that moment she decided she would never again look at a man with anything resembling liking. She would become the premier cat trainer in the entire sport. She would devote her life to the cats and to her parents and brothers. That gave her a bit of a pause. No, it would work. It would be fine. Perhaps when Lady Dauntry retired, she would mount the dais at the McCaulty racetrack and shout, “Free the Cats!”

She dressed beautifully for dinner. She knew even before she stood in front of her dressing table, ready for company, that she couldn’t possibly look finer than she did at this moment. She gave herself a ghastly smile in her mirror. Timma, Aunt Alex’s maid, said from behind her, “The pale pink, it is delightful on you, Miss Sherbrooke.”

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